Pages

September 29, 2011

Ip Man: The Legend is Born (Herman Yau, 2010)

Unimpressed by Ip Man: The Legend is Born's trailer, the film didn't make it into my preliminary list of ten films for the festival so, mere hours before the showing, cutting it very close to showtime, I quickly decide on a secondary list of ten films for the festival, bringing my total up to twenty films thus far. Once I buy the tickets through the Admissions network, I have to hurry to the box-office to make sure I print all my tickets before showtime.I meet my brother in the line for Ip Man, almost stretching up to Sherbrooke street. I've been trying to get my family and friends to accompany me to Fantasia, and it's been an uphill battle. But now that the Festival is getting more mainstream creds, interest has increased, even if it hasn't translated into familiar moviegoers around me during my Fantasia screenings. Nevertheless, my little brother, Thierry, has, until now, been open to accompanying me to Asian action flick, the first one this year being the unfortunate Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame, our chaotic introduction to the festival's wuxia selection. In that regard, I'm a little apprehensive about Ip Man: it comes with a few underwhelming reviews; unlike the first Ip Man, it wasn't lauded at the Hong Kong Film awards; Donnie Yen has gracefully exited the franchise, leaving Yu-hang To to replace him as a young Ip Man; the previous two films director, Wilson Yip, has relinquished the reigns to a new director, Herman Yau; the film is a prequel, effectively rebooting the franchise (and God how I hate prequels / sequels / reboots!). So, this movie has a lot going against it as my brother and I scan the Hall theater for adequate seating. But, once the movie starts, past its cheesy introduction, with Sammo Hung as Ip Man's dying Wing Chun kung fu master, the third Ip Man actually became quite engrossing. Closer to the excitement, fun and emotional pull of the first film, Ip Man: The Legend is Born never tries to pretend it's the same movie and, instead, builds its own wuxia trail while borrowing from popular Asian film storylines. To actually imitates to perfection Donnie Yen's imitation of Ip Man, linking his performance to the previous films, sure, but also trailblazing further by infusing his own persona, body language, style and attitude into the character. His Ip Man looks as wise and dangerous as previously but that's a magnificent illusion; as a young incarnation, he's reckless and impetuous, pretentious and egotistic, in a sense guilty of all of youth's sins, but in all the while, in the subtle performance, we still notice the leadership abilities, the 'master of kung-fu' qualities that will lead him to become a world-respected figure. Apart from a few out-of-left-field plot twists, Ip Man: The Legend is Born garners attention and holds it. To's kung-fu is brutal but controlled, very different from Donnie Yen's graceful style, and closer to the real Wing Chun, a style he's said to practice in real life. The fight scenes are savage and wholly imaginative, yet managing to sometimes feel more elegant and poetic than in the previous movies. The storyline is close to several historical wuxia, certainly akin to the first movie's plot, with the Japanese as the main villains. But, it jumps ahead of other Hong Kong franchises and anticipates the gravitas of local collaborators, having Chinese-raised Japanese spies in sharp internal conflict, torn between duty and patriotism. Ip Man: The Legend is Born is close to a pitch-perfect mainstream action film. Yu-hag To, Donnie Yen's replacement, not only proves that he has the acting chops to shoulder the franchise from now on, but also, from his innocuous appearance and mysterious glare to his fluid kung-fu, emerges as a rising star in Hong Kong cinema. INFO: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1641638/